Pain
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Functional ability, including the ability to perform activities of daily living (ADL), is considered a core outcome domain in chronic pain clinical trials and is usually assessed through generic or disease-specific self-report questionnaires. Research, however, indicates that self-report and performance-based assessment of ADL offer distinct but complementary information about ability. The present study, therefore, investigated the applicability of a performance-based measure of ADL ability, the Assessment of Motor and Process Skills (AMPS), among 50 women with chronic widespread pain. ⋯ Data were obtained based on a repeated measures design performing AMPS evaluations twice pre- and twice post-rehabilitation. Results indicated that the ADL motor ability measures of the participants were significantly lower than those of healthy women of same age, the ADL motor and ADL process ability measures remained stable when no intervention was provided and the ADL motor ability measures were sensitive to change following a 2-week interdisciplinary rehabilitation program. A weak correlation (r(s)=-0.35) was found between self-reported ADL ability as measured by the physical function subscale of the Functional Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) and performance-based ADL motor measures, and no correlation (r(s)=-0.02) was found between FIQ ADL measures and ADL process ability, supporting the need for both performance-based and self-reported assessment of ADL.
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Using latent class analysis (LCA), a previous study on patients attending primary care identified four courses of low back pain (LBP) over the subsequent 6 months. To date, no studies have used longitudinal pain recordings to examine the "natural" course of recurrent and chronic LBP in a population-based sample of individuals. This study examines the course of LBP in the general population and elaborates on the stability and criterion-related validity of the clusters derived. ⋯ Three of the four clusters describing the typical course of pain matched the clusters described previously for patients in primary care. Due to the population-based design, this study achieves, for the first time, a close insight into the "natural" course of chronic and recurrent low back pain, including individuals that did not necessarily visit the general practitioner. The findings will help to understand better the nature of this pain in the general population.
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Primary dysmenorrhea (PDM) is the most prevalent gynecological disorder for women in the reproductive age. PDM patients suffer from lower abdominal pain that starts with the onset of the menstrual flow. Prolonged nociceptive input to the central nervous system can induce functional and structural alterations throughout the nervous system. ⋯ Our results demonstrate that abnormal GM volume changes are present in PDM patients even in the absence of pain. These changes may underpin a combination of impaired pain inhibition, increased pain facilitation and increased affect. Our findings highlight that longer lasting central changes may occur not only in sustained chronic pain conditions but also in cyclic occurring pain conditions.
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Clinical Trial
Neurophysiological assessment of spinal cord stimulation in failed back surgery syndrome.
Despite good clinical results, the mechanisms of action of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) for the treatment of chronic refractory neuropathic pain have not yet been elucidated. In the present study, the effects of SCS were assessed on various neurophysiological parameters in a series of 20 patients, successfully treated by SCS for mostly unilateral, drug-resistant lower limb pain due to failed back surgery syndrome. Plantar sympathetic skin response (SSR), F-wave and somatosensory-evoked potentials (P40-SEP) to tibial nerve stimulation, H-reflex of soleus muscle, and nociceptive flexion (RIII) reflex to sural nerve stimulation were recorded at the painful lower limb. ⋯ Analgesia induced by SCS mainly correlated with RIII attenuation, supporting a real analgesic efficacy of the procedure. This study showed that SCS is able to inhibit both nociceptive (RIII-reflex) and non-nociceptive (P40-SEP, H-reflex) myelinated sensory afferents at segmental spinal or supraspinal level, and to increase cholinergic sympathetic skin activities (SSR facilitation). Complex modulating effects can be produced by SCS on various neural circuits, including a broad inhibition of both noxious and innocuous sensory information processing.
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We aimed to study the quality of communication between health care providers and patients with low back pain with emphasis on information giving in a back pain clinic, including if characteristics of patients could be associated with communication quality. We videotaped 79 encounters in which 21 providers informed patients about the results of magnetic resonance imaging of the back. Background information about the patients was collected by questionnaires and interview after the encounter. ⋯ The results were significant for all professional subgroups (doctors, physiotherapists, chiropractors). Communication quality in encounters with back pain patients is worse, the longer the patient has suffered pain. Poor communication quality also seems to be associated with patients being older.